Posted inOctober 17, 1994: As elections near, green hopes wilt

Timber industry takes a stand

Stung by the Sierra’s Club’s book, Clearcut, the timber industry has struck back with a glossy 28-page rebuttal. Closer Look: An On-the-Ground Investigation of the Sierra Club’s Book, Clearcut, makes the case that clearcutting can improve forest health. The Sierra Club’s 1993 book presented aerial photographs of nearly 100 denuded sites to represent the industry’s […]

Posted inOctober 17, 1994: As elections near, green hopes wilt

Organizing citizens for the next 20 years

-Where do citizen activists go from here?” asks the 20th anniversary issue of The Workbook, published by the Albuquerque-based Southwest Research and Information Center. Varying answers come from 19 veteran activists whose essays appear in this special 47-page issue. In New Mexico, Maria Varela says empowering land-based communities to develop their economies is the answer […]

Posted inOctober 17, 1994: As elections near, green hopes wilt

Reality intrudes on Big Rock Candy Mountain

The bluebirds no longer sing by the lemonade springs: The Big Rock Candy Mountain Resort on the Sevier River near Marysvale, Utah, is bankrupt. The sulphur- and chocolate-colored mountain, celebrated in a song written by Harry McClintock and sung by Burl Ives, attracted visitors from around the world who during the 1950s drank its mineral-rich […]

Posted inOctober 17, 1994: As elections near, green hopes wilt

Babbitt helps a river

Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt has declared an 11-mile stretch of southern Oregon’s Klamath River a National Scenic River. Babbitt’s decision deals a death blow to the city of Klamath Falls’ proposed Salt Caves hydroelectric project, reports The Oregonian. Oregon citizens voted six years ago to include the free-flowing portion of the river in the state’s […]

Posted inOctober 17, 1994: As elections near, green hopes wilt

Yellowstone fires produce new trees, not meadows

Crouched over a metal screen like a gold rush prospector and peering through its grid at the forest floor, Cindi Persichetty calls out what she sees through each square-inch opening: “Line four: moss, moss, litter, seedling, seedling, seedling.” Another Idaho State University graduate student, Mike O’Hara, sits on a log recording the findings on a […]

Posted inOctober 17, 1994: As elections near, green hopes wilt

The progress of freewheeling consensus jeopardized as feds pull back

Early in 1993, some Oregon folks who shared little but a fierce love for their valley met to talk things over on Jack Shipley’s deck high above the Applegate River. Dwain Cross, owner of an Ashland logging company, wondered if there was a way the federal government could resume selling timber despite court injunctions blocking […]

Posted inOctober 17, 1994: As elections near, green hopes wilt

Missing: another tribal environmentalist

In a case reminiscent of the mysterious death of Navajo activist Leroy Jackson, violence is suspected in the disappearance of an outspoken environmental activist on Arizona’s Gila River Indian Reservation. Fred Walking Badger, who had rallied opposition to pesticide use on the Gila River Reservation, set out to run a brief errand May 21 near […]

Posted inOctober 17, 1994: As elections near, green hopes wilt

Native Americans move ahead politically

Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story, As elections near, green hopes wilt. Four years ago, Navajos living in the southeast corner of Utah set out to capture county government. A Democratic slate of five Navajos and one Cherokee campaigned for sheriff, county clerk, county assessor, county treasurer, county recorder and […]

Posted inOctober 17, 1994: As elections near, green hopes wilt

As elections near, green hopes wilt

Two years ago environmentalists were flying high following the election of President Bill Clinton, Al Gore and a cadre of Democrats in Congress. 

Surely this was the time to reform grazing and mining on public lands, designate millions of acres of new wilderness, toughen laws protecting water and wildlife.

 But the brief window of opportunity […]

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